“Once upon a time, there was a land crafted from magic.”
This is now the fourth time I’ve read the series prologue describing the history and background of the cursed and blessed kingdoms of the fairytale realm of Terra, and it still gives me chills every time! I was especially excited to read Spindled Slumber because Sleeping Beauty is my second favorite princess after Snow White of course (I suppose I like the ones that sleep haha) and this installment was filled with more fairytale magic and mystery than ever before.
This book is broken into two parts, Before Slumber and After Slumber. Briar has a much different internal monologue than the previous princesses. She is very in tune with her emotions and brutally honest. It was refreshing to read from her POV because the way she processes things is very different from the previous 3 princesses. Also, loved how my fave Queen Scarlett, aka Snow White, had a cameo!
This is the best worldbuilding I’ve seen thus far. I say this frequently, but I firmly believe that world building is the single most important part of genres like fairytales or fantasy, because it is so different from our world and that is what makes those genres appealing. People read these genres as an escape from the real world, and the better the world is described and expanded upon, the easier it is to picture ourselves in a place so different from our own. Kayla takes us from the desert kingdom of Thorn, hot and golden with sand, to the icy kingdom of Haleston, a snowy kingdom of harsh and bitter cold. The way that Thorn is described is absolutely perfect. The palace is a visual masterpiece and so easy to picture. I also liked the idea of how the rose vines on Thorn were sentient and the people of the kingdom speak to them and craft relationships with them, because they have the power to bless a kingdom and even reveal old secrets. And Haleston! The mysterious icy kingdom with the Blackwoods and creepy mountain guarded by a village. I was even more fascinated by Haleston! I can’t wait to return to Haleston and this mysterious village guarding the mountain because it left off without the answers I wanted (possibly for Princess Allora’s story?)
Now onto the romance! Briar first meets Gideon on a trip to Haleston at age 14 and she is absolutely hilarious in the carriage ride over, deciding she is going to avoid Prince Gideon at all costs because part of his curse was to take the same appearance of the traitor king, so she deduced that he absolutely had to be ugly (lol) and probably had a snout (luckily for her, he doesn’t). To everyone’s surprise, rather than Crown Prince Oliver, it was the icy, melancholy Prince Gideon who captures her attention. Unfortunately, his true curse is that whoever he falls in love with will die. And this is mixed with Briar’s curse of pricking her finger on a spindle and dying before her 19th birthday. In the Before Slumber portion of the book, we see Briar and Gideon in their younger years and how their love story grows despite Gideon trying not to grow feelings, and he must try to break the curse to save Briar’s life.
This absolutely is the best installment so far. The world building is incredible, the romance believable, and the mystery creepier than ever. With much of this story taking place in Haleston (the residence of the traitor prince), there is a lot of creepiness, involving a Blackwood staff and a feared portrait of the traitor prince rumored to steal your very soul if you look into its eyes. It’s so different, in the best way. There was an element of magic and mystery to this that made this special. Kayla has grown so much as an author over the span of these books!
I read this book in my fairytale themed home library with a frothy peppermint mocha with oat milk and it was the absolute perfect way to spend a Saturday morning. I was thrilled to be able to visit the continent of Terra for the fourth time and will be eagerly awaiting the next book when I can return once again.